Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Wednesday Wanderings

On a warm rainy Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Bidenomic claims versus reality.

From FrontpageMag, California Democrat state Senators walk out on a gay man.

From Townhall, Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) describes the Biden family cover-up as only he can.

From The Washington Free Beacon, President Biden orders the White House staff to ignore the existence of his granddaughter, whose father is his son Hunter.

From the Washington Examiner, why is a nine-dash line on a map getting the movie Barbie banned in several Asian countries?

From The Federalist, left-wing activists in Ohio deceptively try to disenfranchise parents.

From American Thinker, who is paying for all the illegal aliens who have entered the U.S.?

From MRCTV, the movie Sound of Freedom is a must-see.

From NewsBusters, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre has answered exactly one question about First Son Hunter Biden all year.

From Canada Free Press, what does Hunter Biden have to do in order to be prosecuted?

From CBC News, the RCMP charges a man from Ottawa Canada with terrorism offenses.

From Global News, evacuees return to Rivière-Éternité, Quebec, Canada after a landslide killed two people.

From CTV News, what does the El Niño mean for Canada?

From TeleSUR, CARICOM leaders meeting in Trinidad and Tobago seek solutions to problems in the Caribbean.

From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. parliamentcritters should not turn their backs on people injured by coronavirus vaccines.

From Snouts in the Trough, will the World Health Organization join the climate change bandwagon?

From the Express, even the staff at the bank where U.K. politician Nigel Farage was a customer are baffled about why his accounts were closed.

From the Evening Standard, Scotland celebrates the coronation of King Charles III at a cathedral in Edinburgh.

From the (U.K.) Independent, two woman are arrested after allegedly trying to climb over a safety barrier in an effort to protest Charles's Scottish coronation.

From the (Irish) Independent, Ireland's High Court gives permission for a hospital to perform a caesarian section on a pregnant woman against her will.

From the Irish Examiner, school transportation costs in Ireland almost double in seven years.

From VRT NWS, an open-air swimming poll called FLOW opens in Brussels, Belgium.

From The Brussels Times, is "greedflation" happening at Belgian supermarkets?

From the NL Times, airlines operating at Schiphol Airport in the Netherlands cancel hundreds of flights due to Storm Poly.

From Dutch News, teachers and parents welcome a ban on phones in Dutch classrooms.

From Deutsche Welle, archaeologists display treasured recovered from a sunken 17th century Hanseatic ship found in the Baltic Sea near Lübeck, Germany.

From ReMix, Russia warns that Poland's quest for nuclear weapons could lead to World War III.

From EuroNews, French President Emmanuel Macron considers "suspending social media tools" due to the recent violent protests in his country.

From Balkan Insight, the NATO peacekeeping mission KFOR denies that weapons are being smuggled into northern Kosovo in ambulances.

From The North Africa Post, Tunisian authorities detain three sub-Saharan Africans after a Tunisian man is stabbed to death.

From The New Arab, antiquities from a prehistoric civilization in Libya's Acacus Mountains are in danger of extinction.

From Gatestone Institute, honoring America's Independence Day.

From The Stream, who brought she-don't-lie into the White House?

From The Daily Signal, Alliance Defending Freedom senior counsel Erin Hawley responds to left-wing criticism of the Supreme Court ruling in favor of a Christian web designer.

From The American Conservative, Joe Biden's divine right.

From The Western Journal, Biden supporters turn away from him because he blocked traffic.

From BizPac Review, a high school student blasts the National Speech & Debate Association after she is censored for mentioning former President Trump.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From The Daily Wire, according to right-wing commentator Ben Shapiro, the left's reaction to the Biden administration's social media case shows their real position on free speech.

From the Daily Caller, former congresscritter Denver Riggleman (R-VA) falsely claims that the contents of Hunter Biden's laptop have not been verified.  (According to his Wiki page, Riggleman was a Republican while in the House, but is now an independent.)

From Breitbart, a new paramilitary group forms in southern Mexico.

From Newsmax, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu praises the IDF operation in Jenin, West Bank and promises more action.

And from the New York Post, you can now rent an "exact replica" of Fred and Wilma Flintstone's home in Maxamitla, Jalisco, Mexico.  (If you read Spanish, read a related story at TimeOut.)

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